![]() ![]() However, it failed to include any of the text above or below the tables, and it neglected to include a graphic. When I converted a PDF document containing large tables to Microsoft Excel, Nitro PDF reproduced the tables perfectly, with the correct fonts and table-row shading. ![]() ![]() Acrobat had no trouble processing the same document, and produced a much better-looking document, with images. I tried using a slightly older version of the application, with the same result the company then rewrote portions of the application and gave me access to the updated application, which performed much better, although some documents still lacked images. Nitro attributed the problems to the PDF being encoded to conform to an older version of the PDF specification, and possibly due to tweaks in the most recent version of Nitro PDF. Several of the other documents that I converted–even ones that had been saved to more recent PDF specification versions–had incorrect fonts, font sizes, and spacing and missing images when they got to Word. When I tried the “Precisely laid out” mode, which uses more text boxes to achieve more accurate layouts, Nitro PDF crashed itself and Microsoft Word over the course of many attempts. ![]()
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